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Sensors and Actuators

Sensors and Actuators. Sections: Sensors Actuators Analog-to-Digital Conversion Digital-to-Analog Conversion Input / Output Devices for Discrete Data. Computer-Process Interface.

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Sensors and Actuators

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  1. Sensors and Actuators Sections: • Sensors • Actuators • Analog-to-Digital Conversion • Digital-to-Analog Conversion • Input / Output Devices for Discrete Data

  2. Computer-Process Interface • To implement process control, the computer must collect data from and transmit signals to the production process • Components required to implement the interface: • Sensors to measure continuous and discrete process variables • Actuators to drive continuous and discrete process parameters • Devices for ADC and DAC • I/O devices for discrete data

  3. Computer Process Control System Transformation Process Continuous and Discrete Variables Continuous and Discrete Parameters Actuators Sensors DAC ADC Computer Controller Output Devices Input Devices

  4. Sensors Stimulus (s) Signal (S) Physical Medium Sensing Element Conditioning Target Handling Temperature Resistance Voltage Information Transducers Micro-sensors 10-6m

  5. Transfer Function where S = output signal; s = stimulus; and f(s) = functional relationship For binary sensors: S = 1 if s > 0 and S = 0 if s< 0. The ideal functional form for an analogue measuring device is a simple proportional relationship, such as: where C = output value at a stimulus value of zero and m = constant of proportionality (sensitivity)

  6. Example • The output voltage of a particular thermocouple sensor is registered to be 42.3 mV at temperature 105C. It had previously been set to emit a zero voltage at 0C. Since an output/input relationship exists between the two temperatures, determine (1) the transfer function of the thermocouple, and (2) the temperature corresponding to a voltage output of 15.8 mV.

  7. Solution 42.3 mV = 0 + m(105C) = m(105C) or m = 0.4028571429 m = 0.4 (s)  15.8 mV = 0.4 (s)  15.8 / 0.4 = s  s = 39.22C

  8. Sensors A sensor is a transducer that converts a physical stimulus from one form into a more useful form to measure the stimulus • Two basic categories: • Analog • Discrete • Binary • Digital (e.g., pulse counter) Ultrasonic (distance) Light (light intensity) Sound (db pressure) Touch

  9. Other Sensors • Temperature • RFID • Barcode • Proximity • Vision • Gyroscope • Compass • Tilt/Acceleration • Etc.

  10. Actuators Hardware devices that convert a controller command signal into a change in a physical parameter • The change is usually mechanical (e.g., position or velocity) • An actuator is also a transducer because it changes one type of physical quantity into some alternative form • An actuator is usually activated by a low-level command signal, so an amplifier may be required to provide sufficient power to drive the actuator

  11. Actuators Mechanism Logical Signal Signal Processing & Amplification Electric Hydraulic Pneumatic Final Actuation Element Actuator Sensor

  12. Types of Actuators • Electrical actuators • Electric motors • DC servomotors • AC motors • Stepper motors • Solenoids • Hydraulic actuators • Use hydraulic fluid to amplify the controller command signal • Pneumatic actuators • Use compressed air as the driving force

  13. Stepper motor and Servomotor

  14. ServoMotor

  15. Torque-Speed Curve of a DC Servomotor and Load Torque Plot Torque, T Load Stepper AC Servo DC Servo Operating Points Speed, ω

  16. NXT Mindstorms - Servo Motor

  17. Motor Controllers The POSYS® 3004 (Designed & Made in Germany) is a PC/104 form factor board dedicated to high performance motion control applications with extensive interpolation functionality. The POSYS® 3004 is designed to control up to 4 axes of servo and stepper motors and provides hardware linear, circular, Bit Pattern and continuous interpolation which allow to perform the most complex motion profiles. Update rates per axis do not exist as each axis runs in absolute real-time mode simultaneously which makes these boards to one of the best performing motion controllers for up to 4 axes in the market.

  18. Stepper Motors Step angle is given by: : where ns is the number of steps for the stepper motor (integer) Total angle through which the motor rotates (Am) is given by:  where np = number of pulses received by the motor. Angular velocity is given by: where fp = pulse frequency Speed of rotation is given by:

  19. Example • A stepper motor has a step angle = 3.6. (1) How many pulses are required for the motor to rotate through ten complete revolutions? (2) What pulse frequency is required for the motor to rotate at a speed of 100 rev/min?

  20. Solution (1) 3.6 = 360 / ns; 3.6 (ns) = 360; ns = 360 / 3.6 = 100 step angles (2) Ten complete revolutions: 10(360) = 3600 = Am Therefore np = 3600 / 3.6 = 1000 pulses Where N = 100 rev/min: 100 = 60 fp / 100 10,000 = 60 fp fp = 10,000 / 60 = 166.667 = 167 Hz

  21. Analog-to-Digital Conversion Sampling – converts the continuous signal into a series of discrete analog signals at periodic intervals Quantization – each discrete analog is converted into one of a finite number of (previously defined) discrete amplitude levels Encoding – discrete amplitude levels are converted into digital code Variable Analogue Signal Discrete Variables 1001 1101 0101 Time

  22. Hardware Devices in Analog-to-Digital Conversion Transformation Process Continuous Variable Sensors & Transducer Multiplexer Amplifer Signal Conditioner Digital Computer Analog Digital Converter Other Signals

  23. Features of an ADC • Sampling rate – rate at which continuous analog signal is polled e.g. 1000 samples/sec • Quantization – divide analog signal into discrete levels • Resolution – depends on number of quantization levels • Conversion time – how long it takes to convert the sampled signal to digital code • Conversion method – means by which analog signal is encoded into digital equivalent • Example – Successive approximation method

  24. Successive Approximation Method • A series of trial voltages are successively compared to the input signal whose value is unknown • Number of trial voltages = number of bits used to encode the signal • First trial voltage is 1/2 the full scale range of the ADC • If the remainder of the input voltage exceeds the trial voltage, then a bit value of 1 is entered, if less than trial voltage then a bit value of zero is entered • The successive bit values, multiplied by their respective trial voltages and added, becomes the encoded value of the input signal

  25. Example • Analogue signal is 6.8 volts. Encode, using SAM, the signal for a 6 bit register with a full scale range of 10 volts.

  26. Resolution Quantisation levels is defined as:  where Nq = quantisation levels; and n is the number of bits. Resolution is defined as: where RADC is the resolution of the ADC; L is the full-scale range of the ADC Quantisation generates an error, because the digitised signal is only sampled from the original analogue signal. The maximum possible error occurs when the true value of the analogue signal is on the borderline between two adjacent quantisation levels, in which case the error is half the quantisation-level spacing; this gives us the following for quantisation error (Quanerr): where RADC is the resolution of the ADC.

  27. Example • Using an analogue-to-digital converter, a continuous voltage signal is to be converted into its digital counterpart. The maximum voltage range is 25 V. The ADC has a 16-bit capacity, and full scale range of 60 V. Determine (1) number of quantization levels, (2) resolution, (3) the spacing of each quantisation level, and the quantisation error for this ADC.

  28. Solution (1) Number of quantization levels: = 216 = 65,536 (2) Resolution: RADC = 60 / 65,536 -1 =  0.0009155 volts (3) Quantisation error: =  (0.0009155)/2 =  0.00045778 volts

  29. Digital-to-Analog Conversion • Convert digital values into continuous analogue signal • Decoding digital value to an analogue value at discrete moments in time based on value within register Where E0 is output voltage; Eref is reference voltage; Bn is status of successive bits in the binary register • Data Holding that changes series of discrete analogue signals into one continuous signal

  30. Example • A DAC has a reference voltage of 100 V and has 6-bit precision. Three successive sampling instances 0.5 sec apart have the following data in the data register: • Output Values: Instant Binary Data 1 101000 2 101010 3 101101 E01 = 100{0.5(1)+0.25(0)+0.125(1)+0.0625(0)+0.03125(0)+0.015625(0)} E01 = 62.50V E02 = 100{0.5(1)+0.25(0)+0.125(1)+0.0625(0)+0.03125(0)+0.015625(0)} E02 = 65.63V E03 = 100{0.5(1)+0.25(0)+0.125(1)+0.0625(0)+0.03125(0)+0.015625(0)} E03 = 70.31V

  31. Input/Output Devices Binary data: • Contact input interface – input data to computer • Contact output interface – output data from computer Discrete data other than binary: • Contact input interface – input data to computer • Contact output interface – output data from computer Pulse data: • Pulse counters - input data to computer • Pulse generators - output data from computer

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